Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / June 28, 1956, edition 1 / Page 12
Part of The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
.v. j i tofts fo"Want"Ads 2S woFds or leas Fifty Cent Per Issue PONIES lt)R RENT Give that 4 or girl of yours a party and hay real live pony to ride. We rent you as many ponies as you need. We send our own man along to -handle the pony. Call or write ue for reservations and fall par ticulars. ECONOMY OIL COMPANY A&heville, N. C. Phone 3-6936 5-1 7tf HELP WANTED Rawleigh Business- available in West Madison County. Products well establish ed. Many thousands of dollars sold there. Good permanent bus iness for steady, dependable man. Write W. T. Rawleigh Co., NOF-610-JU6, Richmond, Va. 6-7 14,21,28p ttUBBER STAMPS For Sale Stamp Pads, Notary and other Seals, Stencils, Rubber Type, Numbering Machines, Staplers ind Ink. Write in your rders or call me at The New, ttecorjd Office. COLEMAN CALDWELL COAL Block, Egg and oil treated Stoker Coal. Summer prices. STINES GULF SERVICE Phone 2154 6-14 7-5p HELP WANTED, WHITE: RELI ABLE MAN WITH CAR wanted to call on farmers in Madison County. $25.00 a day or more! .possible. No capital required. Free 1 fife insurance. Products Nation ally Advertised. Should be be tween ages of 25 to 55. Write The J. R. Watkins Company, Ru ral Sales Department, P. O. Box No. 5071, Richmond, Virginia 6-21 7-5c i FOR RENT Beach Cottage; Elec tric Kitchen; 500 feet from ocean; accommodates 11 people. Call or write H. A. HUNTER Conway. S. C. 6-SW7-12C nrn o i.T C lTo4 nf ri crarntfir in . D0d eendkJon: Reasonably priced. See at Rector Hardware. MRS 'L. D. CODY , Route 2,- Marshall, N. C. &-21,28p FOR SALE NEAR MARS HILL Ideal building lot near Hammar lnd Plant, two-tenths mile off ament on all-weather road; ' 160 feet frontage, slightly rolling. Sty water on lot. See HORACE HALL, . Mars Hill, N. C. Due to unforseeh circumstances, par ty is forced' to return to us a - beautiful mahogany finish Console . Spinet Piano with matching bench. This piano will carry a new piano guarantee for 10 years. It can be purchased by talcing up pay- .enents or we would consider renV ina to reliable party for a reason able length it tkne with option to buy. No, shone calls. For infor mation write: Southern Piano Co., Box 1402, Salisbury. N, C. 631,28c WAJNTEB Capable seamstress wajwiaff to do Pressmak inevr ether kinds. See or write 4, Bmf Marshall,: N f. n.vr vm j . ..V'-.v-. r . : 4 MONTHLY SPARE TIME lUfOnmr W IlecQni ;noney from mn fSt eStHirfb Grade Tut ma .k ii Ut imL'Nn Sellms-1 To oualify for .work! yen: must hve ear referenes640eaah, seenred ny -wtory. IWssing 4 hours week A.. i,Tn mm mJ tm -BaMMltasW foBestione wffl net wp to i00 month ly wtth wry geoa possmumes n mubs ' neeordindy.' fvt inter- jvtew. include jpbene fat appkjeation. Write CaatornlDistrteting Css U N. Juniper StTfclle. 7, Pa. . f?- s?s ' BSB ft yon ImuW like to live near MauMfuh fetes lust to adnntos 'vthM ride from Chicago, if yen .would Ukeie feMsvAousn ( a Kaht ; f f mm d lis ree w s, V -Wc end evenings to yux , self, mc via, friv room; fl"3 - t i 1-1 nd ;.! v t x nal 'te barren m, S LextoUe Read,' Perk ' 1 r M i ' ' The fh-st plebiscite ever held under tie i Uonal trusteeship system is currently underway In Togoland niuJer British Adminis tration, a small United Nations trust territory In West Africa. This plebiscite- follows a decision of the United Kingdom to frant inde pendence to the neighboring colony of the Gold Coast in conjunc tlon with which British Togoland has been administered for the past 40 years. The Togolese are being asked to state whether they wish to join an independent Gold Coasts or ' continue under UN trusteeship. The holding of the plebiscite was approved by the Tenth General Assembly and is being conducted under the super vision of a UN Plebiscite Commissioner, assisted by an international rorps of observers. The picture shows an official going about his work in one of the districts when, the plebiscite Trill be held. Leave Some Honey For The Honeybee (;ood honeybee colonies, kept from swarming, will store at leat two supers or C0 pounds of honey m a fair year. But in a Kou year, this can be increased a third or even more, ac cording to W. A. Stephen, State College extension beekeeper. He says that the colony on scales at State College has been showing increases up to 10 pounds in a 24 hour period. "While this is not ex cessive and isn't half what has been recorded here, it counts up, particu larly if the days preceding have giv en gains totalling 20 to 50 Us. It's onlv the honey stored on wc latter part of the honey flow that the beekeeper can count on as sur plus," Stephen says. All the earli er honey, is stored in around the brood nest where it serves as stores for the long months ahead when no honey is available. Stephen advises leaving an addi tional hive body well-filled with non ey or at least a super of honey with the bees when removing the surplus. After all, they've done all the work. OBLIGING THIEVES Norfolk, Va. After stealing a sale irom a uroau weei Bcryic-c ice station, safe-Crackers 'borrowed' a truck to haul it away. They re turned the truck, however, after looting the safe of $20 and leaving it on the city dump. FOR SALE Steam Boilers and engine: two 60 hp; one 150 hp, with smokestacks; one 46 hp Frick engine in tip-top condition. C. N. GARLAND Hot Snrinara. N. C. 6-28 7-l2p THE.WXMEN WHO SHAPED i .; NEHRU'S LIFE Ever since he was a child, Indies mystie Prime ''Minister has been surrounded by females who shaped his earner. You'll learn the mys tery ef this powerful personality in the revealing article appearing in July 8th issue of THE AMERICAN WEEKLY dutrietcted ' with tJt Nation's Favorite Magexine with the BALTIMORE SUNDAY AMERICAN FOR SALE At bargain price , two need concrete stave silos with door irons and hooks; one 12 ft by SS ft: one 14 ft by 40 feet C. N. GARLAND . Bet, Springs, N. C. t-m-ti-i) ., Mgg8gBaM FOR' C iLE One refrigerator (FrlgUaire Model); one electric tore (FrlgSdaire Model); and M bedrosim suite. BOWASO'-RXESE-" : - ' w Phone 8041 lfp V i V BETTER CHECK 1 JThe-oth Season is already here.. t ; About .having- your Fall and Winte ;:: eleatttfd. . Our modern cleaning me' . - remove eommon dirt and f ; ' jr" .KIT J. ALL" ITOT1I I-' THENEVWiCtOn J Good Choice Of Enterprises Meant Satisfactory Incomes f'VifwiKiiKr irfitble farm enter- 1 prises that were adapted to indi vidual farm conditions contributed to satisfactory incomes to many farm j families in Western North Carolina last year, according to Charles R. Pug, State College extension farm management specialist. Pusrh savs that in this section 0 the state, where farm size is gens ... ... . .. K ally low, test-oemonssrauon iimss- J-J 1 . ..kln.tiAif crops and livestock that best utise their available .labor. V? try production,' during .106S 8jhr , able prices, tfowyer; &;iftiV.te having a combination of thefw. en terprises showed Ta higher'! acreage income than those having eosmnerv cial units inv only one,.; ,.,v . ; Pugh says that increasing rates of production have eeeHeffeetive ; in raising farm income, too, ' particu larly in an area witttcemall farms. Production hay and-forage on the farm has promoted, efficient live stock production. As an example, be says a suceessfo) beef cattle farmer in Haywood ' County spent less than 1100 for teed for his 40 cows. He produced e rest on the farm. V&.i.i' In addition te' "net csh income from the fan n. ntanv f ana families improved their well-being by engag ine in off-farm work and producing much of their food supply at home, Piugh said. . ( Good S! I1 PMi Two oldsters prospecting for . ura nium were much dbrturbed when 8 strangers set' "to'woikbarely a .hun dred yards e.wy -ri V Walking ererVte thV newcomers, the old nartk,Vjl1wrarea were rank imnl . Hsager to heed counsel. Thus wfel'; the veterans, otfted with boundlee hnaginaOon and persuasive' f - joe, launched Into a bright aewmi t cf yeperu W heard about sott two miles away. He eas teurs they shr The other to subdue strangers wa! tondshed to after them. , , ' "Where axe J out Obimrn,r "These JuM convinced tM ema-tetherfc- 1 " , i ii been, taxed but as the ? VhTwat 4 axtneake.;eff aftUfc m fnsething-to rumoi Tl 1 ' L ' '"Vr 'i siCTvr: nnBthtnnit from IWe, Seven) anted gifte to her1 -attendant. . Guesta were:Jttr. Bennett, her mother." Mrs. A. J. 'Ramsey: Mr. L. J. Bennett, Mrs. James Bennett, Mrs. ' Robert Uverett, Mrs. Joe Eads, end the hostesses. Mrs. Hilliard Teasrue enterUined at a cake cutting at her home Sat urday evening following the re- t . 1 in.- 1 -1 A.. vA with white summer flowers. The bride's table was covered with a lace cloth and centered with a crystal swan holding a magnolia bloom, and crystal candleholdera. At one end of the table was a three-tiered wed dinjr cake, and a crystal punch bowl surrounded by gladioli graced the other end. Mrs. A. J. Ramsey cut the cake and Mrs. L. J. Bennett served the punch, assisted by Miss Ann Bristol. Approximately fifty guests, including members of the wedding party, the families, and out-ol-town guests attended. Drive carefullv on the 4th of July. Remember the highways will b e crowded. The life you save may be your own. v SAVS RAT Effective July 1, 1956, our fate of interest on sav ings accounts will be 2 on all Savings Accounts from $100.00. Our Deposits re Insured by, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation X ! i '4 x i ' v; i ' " i i Babv Pines v ' Save Baby Pines For Later Day This year, Tar Heel timber owners should be especially careful with fires, warns R. S. Douglass, State College extension forestry special ist Douglass says that in some cases, 'armers will lose several dollars per -cie in baby pines if their woodland ns. "The heavy pine seed crop Ust fall is showing up now in tht large number of baby pines cominp up in the woods." The forester points out that only once in several years is, there a good crop of seed. Most woodlands need more pines in them' and these good seed years help improve the stand. Douglass says that these tiny pines are only a few inches tall now and have no sale value. But they have a very real value in the promise of future timber growth. He concludes: "Good tree farmers will make a special effort to pro tect these 'babies' because they know it will pay off in more and better timber for sale later." EKMED TO Wo ' e 1 Watch Your Savings Grow With t - i ; -t : , ;sp;ceic:3 h" c Fruit frees v 'Shnibs-'v',' Wd$J,c:3.c: Jr.... the valuo tyt I: Let me 'show :y J1 tC Photograph,'n',8Urk Zjfciu Leader Varieties. 1W t Telephone r write W, v W. EOLBnOOX ' HOT SPWNG3 . ttis Part One Sunday when little EW, returned home from Sunday School his mothet iked him what thehad done Ui his class that day. "Oh some of us sang," he said. "Did you sing?" his mother asked. "No I reed the commercial, he said, meaning he, had read the Bible lesson for Ihifeday. - Power fjy it' .T,-" Si t " '-I 1 i . . . . I , A. 1 - . :. -iB'-'. 1 an J to'Cic
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 28, 1956, edition 1
12
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75